Morris counts himself among the many Americans who have long wondered how the course of history might have changed had Robert F. Kennedy survived an assassin’s bullet.

Morris — who says he’d like to “erase the memory of that terrible night in June” — says Rogan’s political thriller allows readers to go back in time and indulge the fantasy of “what might have been.”

“It stands history on its head even as it raises Bob Kennedy from the bloody kitchen floor,” declared Morris.

Rogan, a judge in the Superior Court of California and former Republican congressman from California, was a prosecutor against Morris’ former boss, Bill Clinton, in the Senate impeachment trial of 1998.

“Doing this show has also given me the opportunity to expand my own understanding of history,” said Gingrich.

After Gingrich posted an episode on what might have happened if Kennedy had not been assassinated in 1968, Rogan emailed his former colleague to inform Gingrich he was “about 95-percent correct” in his assessment.

“Rogan’s take during our conversation was educational for me … he answers these questions with the speculation of an informed political observer with great instincts,” said Gingrich.

Rogan will mark the 50th anniversary of RFK’s assassination with an event at the Nixon Library in Yorba Linda, California, on June 6, 2018.

Learn more about the special event and get your copy now of “On To Chicago.” The book would also make a great gift for fans of the Kennedy family and history buffs.